Categories: AstronomyExoplanets

A Neptune-class exoplanet has been found with its atmosphere stripped away

What happens when a giant planet gets stripped of its atmosphere? It leaves behind a giant core, rich in iron and other metals. A team using NASA’s TESS mission recently found such a remnant core, orbiting a star just 730 light-years away.

The newly discovered exoplanet known as TOI 849 b is a strange one indeed. It orbits a star, not too dissimilar from our own sun, just 730 light-years away. It was discovered with NASA’s Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS), the successor to the successful exoplanet-hunter extraordinaire, The Kepler Space Telescope.

TOI 849 b is strange because it’s both massive (about 40 times the mass of the Earth) but relatively small (just 3.4 times wider than the Earth), as detailed in a recent Nature article. The combination of big mass and small stature means that this planet has to be incredibly dense.

Compare those stats to something like Neptune, which is only 17 times more massive than the Earth but swells to over four times the Earth’s radius.

But whereas Neptune is made of mostly low-density gas and ices, TOI 849 b must be made of mostly iron, rock, and water – the heavy stuff in the cosmos.

It gets stranger still: TOI 849 b orbits so closely to its parent star that a “year” is a mere 18 hours long, and the surface temperatures reach a sweltering 1,500 °C. It’s not a good place for a vacation, but definitely a good place to investigate models of planetary formation.

We expect a planet with that much mass to be even bulkier, swaddling itself in layer after layer of low-density hydrogen and helium, like the gas giants of our own solar system. So either the growth of TOI 849 b was stunted early on – preventing it from acquiring the usual gaseous envelope – or it lost its gassy layers later in life, perhaps by straying too close to its parent star.

Either way, planets of this size are relatively rare, especially this close to their host star, and studying TOI 849 b in more detail can give us crucial clues on how solar systems form and evolve.

Paul M. Sutter

Astrophysicist, Author, Host | pmsutter.com

Recent Posts

That Recent Solar Storm Was Detected Almost Three Kilometers Under the Ocean

On May 10th, 2024, people across North America were treated to a rare celestial event:…

5 mins ago

More Evidence for the Gravitational Wave Background of the Universe

The gravitational wave background was first detected in 2016. It was announced following the release…

2 days ago

When Uranus and Neptune Migrated, Three Icy Objects Were Crashing Into Them Every Hour!

The giant outer planets haven’t always been in their current position. Uranus and Neptune for…

2 days ago

Astronomers Discover the Second-Lightest “Cotton Candy” Exoplanet to Date.

The hunt for extrasolar planets has revealed some truly interesting candidates, not the least of…

2 days ago

Did Earth’s Multicellular Life Depend on Plate Tectonics?

How did complex life emerge and evolve on the Earth and what does this mean…

3 days ago

Hubble Sees a Brand New Triple Star System

In a world that seems to be switching focus from the Hubble Space Telescope to…

3 days ago